If its fixed sights - no. U need a lower front sight, or a taller rear sight - Call S&W - them may be able to send U out a sight of a different height - which U can get a local smith to install... Maybe they'll even offer to ship it to their place to fix it for ya...

Formula for sight adjustment

You're in luck. The gun is shooting low. What you need is a lower front sight. It's easy to take metal off a front sight, but hard to put metal on!

As others have pointed out, before you start whittling on your gun, make darn sure it's the gun, and not the ammo or the shooter. You've ruled out the ammo. The only other thing to check is trigger overtravel. Some guns, after the sear releases the hammer, the trigger travels a long way before it finally stops moving backwards. In the millisecond between the time the sear releases and the trigger reaches the end of its travel, the gun can move down a bit. Your S&W may have excessive overtravel, while your other guns may not.

You can check for overtravel by unloading the gun 9 times, putting all your ammo in a hermetically sealed mayonnaise jar on Funk & Wagnall's front porch, and pointing the gun in a safe direction - something that will stop a bullet and won't be too expensive to replace, if you do have a surprise bang. Then, insert various small objects between the rear of the trigger and the pistol frame, and pulling the trigger extremely slowly and carefully. A paper clip, a toothpick, etc. Try to see if the S&W trigger moves a long way. If you can fit a #2 pencil between the trigger and the frame, and the sear will still release, there's too much overtravel! Compare with your other guns.

Target shooters use adjustable stop screws to eliminate all overtravel. Not a good idea on a SD gun; you don't want zero overtravel. You want to leave a little, to be sure the gun will fire if you need it to. If you think overtravel might be the problem, glue a temporary overtravel stop behind the trigger, and go to the range. A glob of silicone glue, or even wrapping the trigger with a rubber band, will work as a temporary stop. IF you are sure that overtravel is the problem, put a drop of JB Weld on the back of your trigger, let it harden, and then file it down until the gun will fire, but won't have a lot of travel after the sear releases. Or, tap for a small screw, use Lok-Tite, and face off the screw until you have the desired amount of overtravel.

If you are positive the sights are misaligned, then you need to remove some metal from the front sight. Here's the formula:

So, if your front sight and rear sight are 4.5" apart (wild guess; measure with a ruler); and you want to move the group 3", and you are 10 yards away, then (4.5 x 3) / (10 x 36) = .0375. That is, you want to take about 3 or 4 hundredths of an inch off your front sight.

You can do that freehand with a file, or you can build a jig. I find a smooth flat surface (Formica countertop? Smooth kitchen cutting board?) and lay a piece of emery paper on the flat surface. Take the slide off the pistol. Measure the height of the front sight with your dial or digital caliper. Lay the slide down, sights down, with the rear sight on the smooth surface, and the front sight on the emery paper. Slide the slide back and forth so that the emery paper removes metal from the front sight. Check frequently with your caliper so you don't remove too much metal. Repeat until the right amount of metal is removed.

Or, take a very (very!) fine file to the range. Shoot, whittle, shoot again, whittle a little more, shoot, whittle, repeat until the group is where you want it. When you get home from the range, square and level everything up, and touch up with cold blue.

BTW, it's fairly common for guns to be sighted a little low from the factory. The manufacturer can only guess about people's eyes, grips, ammo. It's better for them to make guns that shoot too low instead of too high, because too low is easy to fix.

I mentioned above he needed a lower front sight. That's one thing I like about the P99. The rear sight can be taken off or adjusted for windage - and no gunsmith is needed to mess with it. And, the gun comes w/ 4 front sights of different sizes - so the user can adjust it themselves.

Before U start filing away material from the sight, I'd still call and see if they have sights of different heights. I'll be most manufacturers do. Springfield had a problem a while back with many, many of their 1911s having the wrong height sites. They would send out the proper height ones if U called.

I am experiencing exactly the same problem – shooting 3-4” low at 7-8 o’clock. At first I thought it was my USP. Now I know it is me.

Last weekend, I had another shooter at our club shot a few mags. He was able to get 2” groups from 25 yards consistently on the bull’s eye. He remarked how accurate and nice the gun handles inlcuding the smooth trigger. I hate that when someone out shoots you using your own gun.

He suggested that that I should cover the target with the center dot (USP has a three dot system) instead of have the target sitting on top of the dot. In addition, practice a ton of dry firing with controlled breathing and squeeze the trigger real slow. That gives me something to work on for the next few weeks.